"I go to work from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and during that time my mind has to be totally on work. We're working for clients,” Ben-Gals Emily said. She just passed the bar exam and works at a Cincinnati law firm.

Selina is a senior research engineer at Procter & Gamble.

"Sometimes, I think we're objectified. We're treated as women who this is all that we do and it's not like that. We work hard so we can free up our afternoons to come do this," Selina said.

She said some of her male co-workers still don’t know about her other part-time job.

"As I look at the trajectory of my career, I want to be known as the career woman, the corporate woman. I don't want my legacy to be, ‘Oh, she was the cheerleader.’ I want that to be it was something she did because she loved it,” Selina said.

The women said they practice twice a week for three hours.

“Once 5 o'clock hits, I'm gone and I'm out the door. I’m putting my hair in rollers, trying to put my makeup on and coming to the stadium,” Emily said.

The squad does it all for $90 per game.

"I have a bucket list and being an NFL cheerleader was probably second or third on it. This is my dream come true,” Selina said.

The women said being on the field is only about 10 percent of their work. Their main focus is their schedule of about 80 charity events throughout the year.